Knicks guard Derrick Rose returns in loss to 76ers: 'Felt good'

Ohm Youngmisuk has covered the Giants, Jets and the NFL since 2006. Prior to that, he covered the Nets, Knicks and the NBA for nearly a decade. He joined ESPNNewYork.com after working at the New York Daily News for almost 12 years and is a graduate of Michigan State University.
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PHILADELPHIA -- A determined Derrick Rose returned to the starting lineup Wednesday night.

But one game after Rose didn't show up for a tilt and the team had no idea where its starting point guard was, the drama continued for the reeling New York Knicks, who suffered what could have been their most painful loss of the season to the Philadelphia 76ers.

The NBA has fined Knicks center Kyle O'Quinn $25,000 for a flagrant foul that left Pelicans star Anthony Davis with a bruised left hip.

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The 17-22 Knicks were 14-10 on Dec. 11, and they were still three games above .500 in late December.

Unlike in Monday's 110-96 loss to the New Orleans Pelicans, the Knicks had Rose in their starting lineup. After explaining that he left the team for a "family issue" to be with his mother in Chicago, Rose declared himself mentally ready to return.

Rose, who was fined a "hefty" amount, according to Knicks head coach Jeff Hornacek, displayed moments of vintage Rose on Wednesday. The point guard hit 11 of 16 shots and scored 25 points.

He nailed step-back midrange jumpers, attacked the basket and had a big fourth. He hit his final four shots, scoring eight points in the final quarter, including a 14-foot step-back jumper and a difficult reverse layup on Joel Embiid (21 points and 14 rebounds).

"Just be Derrick," Rose said of his mentality upon returning. "That was about it."

"Felt good," he added. "I missed one day, only one game."

After the Sixers (11-25) pulled within one with 27.8 seconds left, Hornacek went back to Rose. Carmelo Anthony, who scored 28 points but was held scoreless in the fourth, came over to screen for Rose on the left wing.

Rose drove baseline before the defense collapsed, passing out to Brandon Jennings at the top of the key. Jennings swung the ball over to an open Kristaps Porzingis on the right baseline, but Porzingis badly missed a 3-point attempt.

The ball was tipped out toward the Sixers' basket, and Philadelphia grabbed the loose ball and capitalized, scrambling downcourt, before McConnell made his shot near the baseline to set off a joyous celebration in Wells Fargo Center.

The Knicks walked off the floor stunned.

"We got to change our mentality," an exasperated Lee said. "It should be defense first. ... Countless amount of times it came down to transition, and they got wide-open shots, they got dunks, they got layups, they did whatever they wanted to do tonight."

"We got to find consistency in everything that we are doing," Lee added. "There is no consistency in nothing, so that is the start of something on both ends, everything, rotations; we got to find some consistency in something ... soon."

Anthony had warned the morning of the game at the shootaround that the Knicks' season could really take a turn for the worst if they don't start making adjustments right away. He didn't think the Knicks had reached a dire situation yet and wanted to see his team reset with Rose back.

"I think now is just a time that everybody can just exhale a little bit and kind of relax," Anthony said after the shootaround. "It was a little tense around here the last couple of days. You can't play basketball like that. We all need to just relax and focus and put everything else behind us."

"I've seen it for the past couple of years," Anthony later added of his concern. "But I still don't want to say [I'm] frustrated. It's not worrisome. I've seen it before. I've seen this happen before. I've seen it go downhill quickly. I don't think this is the situation. But we have to turn this thing around quickly."

The Knicks return home on Thursday with a chance to stop the bleeding against Rose's old team, the Chicago Bulls.

"We should tell ourselves that it's unacceptable," Anthony said of the stinging loss to Philadelphia. "We were winning this game coming down the stretch. We were winning with 20-something seconds left. We came up short. So it should be unacceptable to all of us."